HydroGeoSphere
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HydroGeoSphere (HGS) is a 3D control-volume
finite element Finite element method (FEM) is a popular method for numerically solving differential equations arising in engineering and mathematical modeling. Typical problem areas of interest include the traditional fields of structural analysis, heat tran ...
groundwater model, and is based on a rigorous conceptualization of the hydrologic system consisting of
surface A surface, as the term is most generally used, is the outermost or uppermost layer of a physical object or space. It is the portion or region of the object that can first be perceived by an observer using the senses of sight and touch, and is ...
and subsurface flow regimes. The model is designed to take into account all key components of the
hydrologic cycle The water cycle (or hydrologic cycle or hydrological cycle) is a biogeochemical cycle that involves the continuous movement of water on, above and below the surface of the Earth across different reservoirs. The mass of water on Earth remains fai ...
. For each time step, the
model A model is an informative representation of an object, person, or system. The term originally denoted the plans of a building in late 16th-century English, and derived via French and Italian ultimately from Latin , . Models can be divided in ...
solves surface and subsurface flow,
solute In chemistry, a solution is defined by IUPAC as "A liquid or solid phase containing more than one substance, when for convenience one (or more) substance, which is called the solvent, is treated differently from the other substances, which are ...
and
energy Energy () is the physical quantity, quantitative physical property, property that is transferred to a physical body, body or to a physical system, recognizable in the performance of Work (thermodynamics), work and in the form of heat and l ...
transport equations simultaneously, and provides a complete water and solute balance.


History

The original name for the code was FRAC3DVS, which was created by René Therrien in 1992. The code was further developed jointly at the
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and the
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, and was primarily used for academic research. It was renamed to HydroGeoSphere in 2002 with the implementation of 2D surface water flow and transport. In 2012, the software became commercialized under the support and management of Aquanty Inc.


Governing equations

In order to accomplish the integrated analysis, HydroGeoSphere utilizes a rigorous, mass conservative modeling approach that fully couples the surface flow and transport equations with the 3-D, variably saturated subsurface flow and transport equations. This approach is significantly more robust than previous conjunctive approaches that rely on linkage of separate surface and subsurface modeling codes.


Groundwater Flow

HydroGeoSphere assumes that the subsurface flow equation in a porous medium is always solved during a simulation, either for fully saturated or variably saturated flow conditions. The subsurface flow equation can be expanded to incorporate discrete fractures, a second interacting porous continuum, wells, tile drains and surface flow. The following assumptions are made for subsurface flow: * The fluid is essentially incompressible. * The porous medium and fractures (or macropores), if present, are non-deformable. * The system is under isothermal conditions. * The air phase is infinitely mobile. The Richards’ equation is used to describe three-dimensional transient subsurface flow in a variably saturated porous medium: :-\nabla \cdot(w_m\textbf)+\sum \Gamma_ \pm Q = w_m \frac (\theta_s S_w) The fluid flux, \textbf, is represented by the Darcy's law shown as: : \textbf = -\textbf \cdot k_r \nabla (\psi+z) where w_m is the volumetric fraction of the total porosity occupied by the porous medium, \Gamma_ is the internal fluid exchange rate (e.g. surface water, wells, and tile drains), Q is the external fluid outside of the model domain, \theta_s is the saturated water content, S_w is the degree of saturation, \textbf is the hydraulic conductivity tensor, k_r is the relative permeability of the medium calculated as a function of saturation, \psi is the pressure head, and z is the elevation head.


Surface water flow

Areal surface water flow is represented in HydroGeoSphere by a two-dimensional depth-averaged flow equation, which is the diffusion-wave approximation of the
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equation for surface water flow. HydroGeoSphere's surface water flow component is implemented with the following assumptions: *Depth-averaged flow velocities *Hydrostatic pressure distribution vertically *Mild slope *Dominant bottom shear stresses. The surface flow components are solved by the following three equations, which are given by the following mass balance equation: :\frac+\frac+\frac+ d_o \Gamma_o \pm Q_o = 0 coupled with the momentum equations, neglecting inertia terms, for the x-direction: :\bar_ = -K_ \frac and for the y-direction: :\bar_ = -K_ \frac where \phi_o is the surface flow domain porosity, h_o is the water surface elevation, \bar_ and \bar_ are the vertically averaged flow velocities in the x and y directions, d_o is the depth of surface water flow, \Gamma_o is the internal fluid exchange, and Q_o is the external fluid exchange. The surface conductances, K_ and K_ are approximated by either the Manning or Chezy equation.


Solute transport

Three-dimensional transport of solutes is described by the modified reactive transport advective-dispersion equation: -\nabla \cdot w_m (\textbf{q} C-\theta_s S_w \textbf{D} \nabla C)+ _m \theta_s S_w R \lambda C{par} + \sum{\Omega_{ex} + Q_c} = w_m \left frac{\partial(\theta_s S_w R C)}{\partial t} + \theta_s S_w R \lambda C \right where C is the solute concentration, \lambda is the first-order decay constant, Q_c is the external source or sink term, \Omega is the internal solute transfer between domains, R is the retardation factor, \textbf{D} is the diffusion coefficient, and par designates parent species for the case of a decay chain.


Heat transport

Graf
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incorporated heat transport within the saturated-zone flow regime into HydroGeoSphere together with temperature-dependent fluid properties, such as viscosity and density. The model’s capability was successfully demonstrated for the case of thermohaline flow and transport in porous and fractured porous media raf and Therrien, 2007 This work extends the model’s capability to include thermal energy transport in the unsaturated zone and in the surface water, which is considered a key step in the linkage between the atmospheric and hydrologic systems. Surface heat fluxes from atmospheric inputs are an important source/sink of thermal energy, especially to the surface water system. As such, surface heat fluxes across the land surface were also incorporated into HydroGeoSphere. A complete description of the physical processes and governing flow and solute transport equations that form the basis of HydroGeoSphere can be found in Therrien et al.
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and therefore will not be presented here. The general equation for variably saturated subsurface thermal energy transport following Molson et al.
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is given by: -\nabla \cdot \Big(\textbf{q} \rho_w c_w T - (k_b + c_b \rho_b \textbf{D}) \nabla T\Big) + \Omega_o \pm Q_T = \frac{\partial \rho_b c_b T}{\partial t} where \rho is the density, c is the heat capacity, T is the temperature of the bulk subsurface, k is the thermal conductivity, D is the thermal dispersion term, Q_T is the thermal source/sink, \Omega_o is the thermal interactions between the surface and subsurface, and Q_T is the external thermal interactions.


Surface-subsurface coupling

The 2-D areal surface flow modules of HydroGeoSphere follow the same conventions for spatial and temporal discretizations as those used by the subsurface modules. The surface flow equation is solved on a 2-D finite-element mesh stacked upon a subsurface grid when solving for both domains (i.e. the x- and y-locations of nodes are the same for each layer of nodes). For superposition, the grid generated for the subsurface domain is mirrored areally for the surface flow nodes, with surface flow node elevations corresponding to the top elevation of the topmost active layer of the subsurface grid. Note that surface flow node elevations may vary substantially to conform with topography. However, the assumptions of small slope inherent in the diffusion-wave equation will not allow for modeling of inertial effects. The discretized surface equation is coupled with the 3-D subsurface flow equation via superposition (common node approach) or via leakage through a surficial skin layer (dual node approach). For both approaches, fully implicit coupling of the surface and subsurface flow regimes provides an integral view of the movement of water, as opposed to the traditional division of surface and subsurface regimes. Flux across the land surface is, therefore, a natural internal process allowing water to move between the surface and subsurface flow systems as governed by local flow hydrodynamics, instead of using physically artificial boundary conditions at the interface. When the subsurface connection is provided via superposition, HydroGeoSphere adds the surface flow equation terms for the 2-D surface mesh to those of the top layer of subsurface nodes. In that case, the fluid exchange flux, which contains leakance term does not need to be explicitly defined.


Features

The HGS model is a three-dimensional control-volume finite element simulator which is designed to simulate the entire terrestrial portion of the hydrologic cycle. It uses a globally implicit approach to simultaneously solve the 2D diffusive-wave equation and the 3D form of Richards’ equation. HGS also dynamically integrates key components of the hydrologic cycle such as evaporation from bare soil and water bodies, vegetation-dependent transpiration with root uptake, snowmelt and soil freeze/thaw. Features such as macro pores, fractures, and tile drains can either be incorporated discretely or using a dual-porosity, dual permeability formulation. Additionally, HydroGeoSphere has been linked to Weather Research and Forecasting, a mesoscale atmospheric model for fully coupled subsurface, surface, and atmospheric simulations.


Other groundwater models

* FEFLOW * MODFLOW
OpenGeoSys


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Hydrogeosphere Scientific simulation software Hydrogeology software Hydrology models Integrated hydrologic modelling Earth sciences software